Notes and Editorial Reviews

Schäfer is in magnificent form...fascinating.

This is Christine Schäfer’s debut release for Sony Classical. I have admired this German soprano’s voice since her 1997 Berlin recording of Mozart concert arias and Richard Strauss orchestral songs with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra under Claudio Abbado (Deutsche Grammophon 457 5822).

Throughout the booklet there are numerous pictures of Schäfer in artistic poses together with what looks like a cheese plant in four of the frames. To my untrained eye on the front cover Schäfer looks as if she has the hairstyle of a wealthy Parisian middle class women in the time of Marie Antoinette. All very arty but no more than I would expectRead more from this superb and highly individual performer. There are eleven tracks and Schäfer sings on eight of them. I had the pleasure of hearing the DSO Berlin in concert last September at the
Musikfest Berlin 2011 under Leo Hussain; the featured work was the Saint-Säens
Symphony No. 3 C minor ‘
Organ’. As well as accompanying Schäfer this orchestra plays a fascinating if curious mix of three orchestral works. I was hearing the
Overture from Amboise Thomas’s opera
Raymond or
Le secret de la reine for the first time. I loved this appealingly melodic score. The
Adagietto from Bizet’s
Arlésienne suite No. 1 is simply ravishing and their superb performance of Schoenberg’s
Farben:
Sommermorgen an einem See (
Colours:
Summer Morning by a Lake) which is No. 3 from the
Five Orchestral Pieces, Op. 16 has a stunning, cool beauty.

Christine Schäfer has selected her scores well in repertoire that ranges from the baroque of Handel to the sumptuous late-Romantic of Richard Strauss. The first score on the disc, the dramatic
Sein wir wieder gut from
Ariadne auf Naxos really tests the extremes and power of Schäfer’s range. Not surprisingly in this difficult aria the results felt a touch forced and not totally comfortable in the lower notes. Schäfer is eminently suited to Handel’s
O sleep, why dost you leave me? This is sung with fine English diction and evident tenderness. I delighted in Schäfer’s creamy timbre in Bellini’s charming
Ah! non credea mirarti from
La Sonnambula. Her impressive coloratura is presented splendidly in Ambroise Thomas’s
Je suis Titania from that sorely neglected opera
Mignon. Most impressive of all is her Desdemona in Verdi’s dramatically presented
Willow Song. Here she is in radiant form and explodes up to the highest notes to wonderful effect.

Recorded in the Teldex Studios, Berlin the sound quality is crystal clear and well balanced. I enjoyed this release from first note to last. It is good to see full texts included together with English translations.

Schäfer is in magnificent form in this fascinating Sony Classics release.